Finally got it to work by trial and error. If I boot the machine with
'noapic' and remove all splash and vga= options I systematically get all
cores recognized. Seems like 'noapic' is the real key here. Without it,
booting can bring up 1, 2 or 4 cores in a seemingly random fashion.
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Usually
I observed the same kind of defect on an AMD Phenom 9550 Quad Core: most
of the time only one CPU is recognized and the others are indicated as
not responding, and sometimes all four are present. Disabling or
enabling ACPI does not change anything, the cores are not more often
recognized.
One
I'd rather let Ubuntu developers deal with the Linux-USB guys. I do not
have enough knowledge or time to track this bug with the (presumed)
authors.
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file transfers on USB disk are very slow
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/197762
You received this bug notification because you are a member of
I just checked on the linux-usb mailing-lists, there is absolutely nothing on
that topic. E-mails sent directly to the USB guys come back with a mention like
don't even bother sending us e-mails, go to a newbie web site or contact your
distribution bug team.
Dont acte. What are the next steps?
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: beagle
CHM indexing is disabled in Hardy (Ubuntu 8.04.1)
beagle is the only search tool on Unix that has support for this file format.
This was corrected upstream in Debian.
** Affects: beagle (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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